Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections

Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections

SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOLUME 67, NUMBER 2 CAMBRIAN GEOLOGY AND PALEONTOLOGY IV No. 2. -THE ALBERTELLA FAUNA IN BRITISH COLUMBIA AND MONTANA (With Plates 1 to 7) BY CHARLES D. WALCOTT (Publication 2445) CITY OF WASHINGTON PUBLISHED BY THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION MAY 9, 1917 Zf>( £oxt> QSafttmore tytce: BALTIMORE, MD., tj. B. A. CAMBRIAN GEOLOGY AND PALEONTOLOGY IV No. 2.—THE ALBERTELLA FAUNA IN BRITISH COLUMBIA AND MONTANA Br CHARLES D. WALCOTT (With Plates i to 7) CONTENTS PAGE Introduction 9 Identification of the genus Albertella 10 Stratigraphic position 1 r Ross Lake section 13 Montana area 14 Gordon Mountain section 15. Faunal characteristics , 19 Relations to subjacent fauna 19 Relation to superjacent fauna 20 Notes on the fauna 22 Description of genera and species 24 ILLUSTRATIONS PLATES FACING PAGE 1. Panoramic view of Mount Bosworth 12 2. Ross Lake cirque and Popes Peak 14 3. Profile view of north cliff of Ross Lake Mountain 15., 4-7. Illustrations of fauna of Ross Lake and Gordon shales and of the limestones of the Ptarmigan and Chetang formations 52-58 INTRODUCTION 1 When discussing the Dearborn River section in 1908 * I stated: that the Albertella fauna of the Montana sections was placed in the Lower Cambrian as the fauna was strikingly similar to that occurring in the drift blocks which were believed to have come from the lower portion of the Mount Whyte formation of the Mount Bosworth section of British Columbia ; that the Mount Whyte formation was 1 Smithsonian Misc. Coll., Vol. 53, 1908, pp. 202, 203. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections. Vol. 67, No. IO SMITHSONIAN" MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 6/ placed in the Lower Cambrian owing to the presence of trilobites of the genus Olenellus; that the presence of Albertella in the Mount Whyte formation was based on the occurrence of numerous trilobitic cranidia that appeared to be generically identical with the cranidia of Albertella. The genus Albertella was subsequently identified in the Robson Peak District in a drift block supposed to have been derived from the Middle Cambrian Chetang formation limestone about 350 feet above 1 the Hota formation which was referred to the Lower Cambrian. In 1914 Mr. L. D. Burling concluded after a thorough and admir- able study that on paleontological evidence the Albertella fauna was of Middle Cambrian age and that the specimens of Olenellus found in 2 the Mount Whyte formation were examples of recurrence. On the basis of this conclusion Burling placed the Mount Whyte forma- tion in the Middle Cambrian. A notice of the discovery of the genus Albertella near the line of the North Kootenay Pass by Dr. Frank D. Adams and Mr. W. J. Dick, 3 when looking for deposits of phosphate of lime, escaped my attention until Dr. Adams mentioned it to me. There is nothing in the section, however, to indicate the stratigraphic position of the fossils in relation to a known Lower Cambrian fauna. Recently (January, 1917) through the courtesy of Dr. Adams I have had the opportunity of looking over the fossils. They are not well preserved on the surface of the shaly limestone, but it is possible to tentatively determine the following genera and species : Agraulos stator Walcott Vanuxemella nortia Walcott Albertella bosworthi Walcott Asaphiscus rossensis Walcott In 1916 Burling described a locality of the Albertella fauna in situ on Mount Bosworth and stated that the fauna was of Middle Cam- 4 brian age. Identification of the Genus Albertella At the time of the preliminary identifications of the faunas, in connection with the publication of " Cambrian Sections of the Cordil- 1 Smithsonian Misc. Coll., Vol. 57, 1913, P- 33& 2 Canadian Geol. Surv., Museum Bull., No. 2, Geol. Ser., No. 17, 1914. P- 36. 3 Commission of Conservation, Canada, Discovery of Phosphate of Lime in the Rocky Mountains. 8vo pamphlet. Ottawa, 1915, p. 13. 4 Summed up in article in American Journal Science, Dec, 1916, 4th Ser., Vol. 42, pp. 469-472. NO. 2 ALBERTELLA FAUNA IN BRITISH COLUMBIA AND MONTANA II leran Area," in 1908/ I did not fully appreciate that trilobites with almost identical cranidia might have a dissimilar thorax and pygidium and belong to quite distinct genera. This conclusion came later, when studying groups of Cambrian trilobites retaining their entire dorsal shield so that the cephalon, thorax, and pygidium of many genera might be compared. 2 During the winter of 191 5-16 I studied all the material available of the genus Bathyuriscus, and found that my previous conception of 3 that genus was inaccurate, and that species from the Mount Whyte formation I had referred to a new genus, Bomcmannia* were to be 5 included under a subgenus of Bathyuriscus. Another result was to question the identification and presence of the genus Albertella in the Mount Whyte formation as it was based only on specimens of the cranidium. This was not carried further before I left for the field in June, 1916, but was taken up on my return in October. This review has how led to the elimination of the genus Albertella from the lists of the fauna of the Mount Whyte formation and this includes the lists from localities 35c and 57e as published in the description of Bathyu- 5 riscus (Poliella) primus. The available field notes and fossils of the Mount Whyte formation are now being studied, but it may be necessary for me to visit some of the typical localities before expressing an opinion as to the desira- bility of including a portion of the Mount Whyte formation in the Middle Cambrian as so strongly urged by Burling. 8 STRATIGRAPHIC POSITION The exact stratigraphic position of the typical Albertella fauna was unknown to me when I went to the field in June, 191 6, although Burling had stated in a general way that he had found it on Mount Bosworth in the Cathedral formation and I had a specimen from the Cathedral limestone of Castle Mountain. The fauna was originally 7 referred to the Lower Cambrian, but neither in British Columbia nor Montana was there at that time a known occurrence of the fauna 1 Smithsonian Misc. Coll., Vol. 53, 1908, pp. 167-220. 2 See Asaphiscus. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., Vol. 64, 1916, pp. 382, 383. 3 Smithsonian Misc. Coll., Vol. 64, 1916, p. 332. 4 Idem, p. 352. 5 Idem, p. 353. °Geol. Surv. Canada, Museum Bull. No. 2, Geol. Ser., No. 17, 1914, pp. 112-115. ' Smithsonian Misc. Coll., Vol. 53, 1908, p. 202. 12 SMITHSONIAN" MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 6/ as a whole in situ in a section that proved to me beyond question its stratigraphic relation. The position of the fauna found in drift blocks in British Columbia was assumed from the identification of cranidia in the Mount Whyte formation, and this was also extended to a similar fauna found in broken and isolated sections in Montana. During several field seasons in Alberta and British Columbia a general outlook was kept for traces of the Albertella fauna, but at no time was it convenient for me to go back to Mount Bosworth to systematically search for it, but in July, 1916, I began a search for the fauna in the Mount Whyte formation and the superjacent Cathedral limestones. The latter were included as in 1907 the cranidium and pygidium of a species of Albertella were found in the limestones of the Cathedral formation 275 feet (84.6 m.) above the top of the Lower Cambrian on the east shoulder of Castle Mountain, Alberta, which is 19.5 miles (31.2 km.) east-southeast of the Ross Lake section of 191 5 and I had also noted the presence of the cranidium and pygidium of Albertella bosworth; in debris of the Chetang formation which was referred to the Middle Cambrian. 1 We knew from the collection of 1907 at Castle Mountain and from Burling's find on Mount Bosworth that the genus was present in the Middle Cambrian Cathedral limestone, but I did not know that the genus Albertella was not present in the Mount Whyte formation. I have not discussed the finds in the Middle Cambrian heretofore as I was waiting for the time when the Albertella fauna of Mount Bosworth should be accurately located in the section. The first section examined was that of the eastern ridge of Mount Assiniboine 18 miles (28.8 km.) southwest of Banff, Alberta, but without finding any trace of the fauna. Section after section was then studied on the main range to the north and northwest, but it was not until August 24 that the Albertella fauna was located in situ in a hanging glacier cirque above Ross Lake and 1 mile (1.6 km.) south-southwest of Stephen on the Canadian Pacific Railway. After locating the stratigraphic horizon of the siliceous shale and included Albertella fauna I crossed to the north side of the broad Kicking Horse Pass and found it after a day's search in situ on the southern slope of Mount Bosworth west of Burling's locality. The band of shale is from 7 to 11 feet (2 to 3.3 m.) in thickness, and the little terrace formed by it is almost always covered by dirt, broken rock, 1 Smithsonian Misc. Coll., Vol. 57, 1913, p. 338. VOL. NO. SMITHSONIAN MSCELLA 67, 2, PL. Gat hod ra Shorbrook .As^Ptarm i q a n wit: t. Pi ran 1 Panorami ch e best exposed Cambrian sections in the Rocky Mountains. Including ,4 m.) in thickness of strata are exposed. The approximate posi- lion of the fc° f Burling is on the right toward or near A.

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